Getting Started

If you want to write but have no idea where to write, grab a journal from your local dollar store. Find a place you are comfortable writing. Set your alarm an hour earlier, grab a coffee, tea, water, or juice. Open a window look out it and describe what you see. Every little detail. Pick up your writing implement and begin writing, write whatever comes to your mind. Plan to write three pages back and front. If you think you’ve run out of things to say, start writing I can’t think of anything over and over. You brain will get tired of it and give you something to write about. Trust me it works. Stop when you have three full pages.

You have just written Morning Pages, they are a brain dump. Anything that was bothering you, any idea you had for anything it’s all there. Date it, close it up and go start your day. If you are not a morning person and it’s all you can do to face the day, I have a solution.

Write before you go to bed at night. Turn off the computer, the TV. If you need quiet music to unwind use it. Find your spot to write and do the three pages of writing. There will be nothing in your brain to keep you from a good night’s sleep. These are what I call Evening Pages. Be sure to date them.

Stick around for more writing tips.

I Get Asked This a Lot

How do you become a writer? If you truly want to be a writer, you write. Get yourself a cheap notebook from a dollar store. While you’re there stock up on blue or black pens, or if you prefer pencils. Just know that pencils fade over time. Pick up a 3 x 5 flip notebook that will fit in your jeans pocket or a shirt pocket. You are now ready to begin your writing journey.

Get up half an hour earlier in the morning. Get some juice or a cup of hot cocoa, tea, coffee whatever it is you prefer. Find a quiet place where you can look out a window or sit on a deck. I know winter is moving in. No deck in the winter. When you are settled, begin on your first page. Write the date, then just start writing whatever is in your head. Look out the window what do you see? How does it make you feel? Is something weighing on your mind? Write it down. Don’t stop writing until you have filled three pages back and front. Then stop. Close it up put it where it will be ready for tomorrow. Take a deep breath. Your brain should feel clearer. You have just done morning pages. Julia Cameron had all of her college students do them every day. Do it until it just becomes a part of your routine.

Be sure to put the pocket notebook in your pocket. If you get an idea, see something that makes you think and you want to remember it, jot it down. You’ll find yourself writing little notes in the pocket notebook more and more. Be sure to date them. Even if you only write one word or one sentence. 

These are for your eyes only. You are not required to show them to anyone.  You should just write for a week and go back and read them on day seven. Is there a common thread? Is there something you think might make a good story idea? Is there something you just want to know more about or work on changing? Go for it. If not, just keep writing. Eventually you will hear, read, see, or think of something which really grabs your attention. At the end of week two, read both weeks one and two. Still looking for a common thread or anything else which grabs your attention.

Congratulations! You just started a writing career. Give it six months to a year while you keep doing the morning pages and rereading from the beginning each week. You can put your notes from your pocket notebook or reference the date in your morning pages so you can go back to it. 

Happy writing,

Rebecka